By the time Mehmed became Sultan Mehmed II of the Ottoman Empire (1451), the Byzantine Empire was reduced to Constantinople itself, the Peloponnese, and a handful of Aegean islands. The Ottomans had had control of the territory surrounding Constantinople for decades. Mehmed fortified both sides of the Golden Horn, and would eventually lay siege to Constantinople.
Those fortifications were largely there to block reinforcements from the Black Sea, namely the Genoese in the area. In response, the Byzantines stretched a chain across the Golden Horn to keep the Ottomans from using their naval superiority to assault a section of the walls.
Some Christian reinforcements managed to get past the blockade, and Mehmed decided to make up for his navy’s failures by rolling his ships on greased logs overland, then putting them back in the water behind the chain. This rendered the Byzantines chain useless, spread their troops to defend all of the city’s walls, and made the siege much easier on the Ottomans.
The correct answer is:
Assyria were fierce warriors who created weapons out of iron.
Babylon created a written set of laws to rule their civilization.
Ancient Sumer created the first known writing system.
Assyria were fierce warriors who created weapons out of iron. The Assyrian Empire had a powerful army that forged its empire. The fierce warriors used chariots and iron weapons such as swords, spears, bows and arrows, and daggers.
Babylon created a written set of laws to rule their civilization. The Babylons created the Code of Hammurabi, a set of laws enacted by King Hammurabi. The code ruled the people and its interactions such as assault, divorce, trade, and disputes.
Ancient Sumer created the first known writing system. The Sumer system is known as Cuneiform writing, in times of Uruk, in the old Mesopotamia
Pennsylvania. because it was founded by William Penn a Quaker
Answer:
Today there are many types of Protestant Churches. For example, Baptist is currently the largest denomination in the United States but there are many dozens more. How did this happen? Where did they all begin? what we would now call the Roman Catholic Church - under the leadership of the Pope in Rome. Today, we call this "Roman Catholic" because there are so many other types of churches (for example, Methodist, Baptist, Lutheran, Calvinist, Anglican - you get the idea).
Explanation: